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Biography
Woodie W. White is
the United Methodist Bishop for the Illinois Area. He grew up in the
heart of Harlem and by his own admission was a troubled kid. His journey
from there to his position as a bishop is an inspiration to all of us.
He's a wonderful writer and columnist, with two volumes of essays,
titled Confessions of a Prairie Pilgrim and his most recent book,
Conversations of the Heart. [Biographical information is correct as of
the broadcast date noted above.]
"Our Common
Ground"
The late Howard Thurman --
theologian, preacher, professor -- wrote about an experience he had as a
five-year-old. One day he was going to visit a colleague. As he was
about to go into the house, there was a rap on the window. Howard
Thurman said he looked and saw his playmate's father beckoning him to
come to the front door rather than the back.
He did so. He entered the house and there stood the family -- mother,
father, his little playmate. There they stood in the middle of the
living room looking out at the back yard where he was about to walk.
There on the ground was his playmate's two-year-old sister. In her lap
was a rattle snake.
Howard Thurman wrote that the snake curled itself around the child's
body and neck. She stroked it ever so gently. It continued to curl
itself up around her body. She stroked it and pulled it down.
Years later, Howard Thurman wrote it was obvious that these two were
playing with each other. His insight out of that experience, recorded in
one of his books, was that here were two realities thought to be enemies
with one another. They somehow had stepped back and transcended their
difference and found a common ground. No longer enemies, no longer at
war with each other, they somehow had found a common ground. Soon the
child tired of playing with the snake and she crawled back towards the
house. The snake crawled towards the woods.
In a day such as ours where we come to celebrate our diversity, it is
important for us every now and then to step back from the
particularities, in order that we might find our common ground. St. Paul
writes about diversity and suggests that the diversity was really to
make the whole greater, the whole stronger, the whole more meaningful.
While diversity of itself has life and meaning, its main objective is to
bring together into a common ground. Our diversity of race, faith,
ethnicity, gender ought not be barriers, but ought to help us celebrate
our commonalities, our common ground. Every now and then we need to step
back as a nation, as a people, and find our common ground.
I remember that cloudy day in which I traveled to Syracuse, New York. As
the plane was about to land, the flight attendant exclaimed, "Oh, my
God. Oh, my God, not again." We were not sure what had happened. Then
she announced those words that millions of us remember. She said, "I
regret to announce that President Reagan has just been shot."
I immediately moved to a motel and, like millions of others, sat before
a television set praying that our president would find rest, hope and
wholeness and that we would not lose him. It is said that as he was
being wheeled into surgery, he was still conscious. He looked at the
attending physicians and with that quick wit of his said, "I sure hope
you are a Republican." The physician responded, "Mr. President, today we
are all Republicans."
There comes that time when we must find our common ground, where our
differences do not separate, but where our differences come together and
make us one, greater as it were.
In our home, Monday was the day in which my mother prepared vegetable
soup. She had the practice of cooking that soup all day. At night we
would each come and get our bowl of vegetable soup. It was interesting
as we sat and watched how she cooked and how that soup was eventually
served. Our vegetable soup always contained black-eyed peas, white
potatoes and red tomatoes and, unfortunately, okra. Those vegetables
would cook all day. Each vegetable -- the potato, the tomato and the
black-eyed peas -- doing something to each other. The potato brought
something to the tomato and the tomato brought something to the
black-eyed peas. They all tried to bring something to okra.
As we sat at the end of the day to eat the soup, although they had
cooked all day, the tomato was still a tomato, the potato was still a
potato, the black-eyed pea was still a black-eyed pea. Unfortunately,
the okra was still okra. They did not lose their identity. However, each
of them brought something to the whole that made the soup richer and
better because of what each brought to it.
We need to bring our diversity, our pluralism, our differences, so that
our nation might be a greater nation because we come from such
pluralistic backgrounds. As people of faith, we come from different
faith stances, but yet we bring some unique character to it. We find our
common ground and so our faith is stronger because of the diversity in
which we celebrate it.
Our common ground. How we need it in a world that somehow seems to be so
divided, where race seems to divide us -- class, gender -- always
dividing rather than seeing these gifts of God as opportunities to find
our common ground, so that the whole might be greater. Let's find our
common ground.
We are the family of God created by a good and gracious God who made us
different in race, gender, language, so that the nation, the world,
might be a better place. We have our common ground. Our common ground is
found as the family of God.
Those of us who are members of the Christian tradition say that our
common ground is in Christ, for He is able to bring us to a realization
of who we are. Yet, we transcend that difference. Isn't it interesting
that, as we pray our prayer that we call the Lord's Prayer, we begin it
with these two words, "Our Father." Have you ever thought about that?
Here we are diverse in color and language, and yet we claim a common
parentage -- God as parent -- which means we are related one to the
other, brothers and sisters; our common ground as Americans, our common
ground as citizens of this great state, our common ground of those who
called Christ Savior. Our common ground.
If we could only see that common ground as that which will enable us to
be a people of strength, of hope, of wholeness, stepping back from the
particularities so that the common ground might be stronger. Edward
Mote, the hymn writer, said it far more eloquently than I when he wrote:
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My hope is built on nothing less
Than Jesus' blood and righteousness;
I dare not trust the sweetest frame,
But wholly lean on Jesus' name.
On Christ the solid Rock I stand;
All other ground is sinking sand.
All other ground is sinking sand. |
Our common ground -- nation, God, Savior.
Our common ground. Let us step back sometimes from our particularity and
find wholeness and meaning in our common ground.
Let us pray.
Thank you, God, for the privilege of being in the family of God and
knowing what it is to have a family. Help us to remember that out of our
diversity, our common ground. Amen.
Interview with Woodie
White
Interviewed by David Hardin
David Hardin:
Bishop, this talk of yours is so appropriate about celebrating diversity, about
our common ground, looking at the things we have in common, rather than the ways
that we are different. It seems to me that there is still a lot of attention,
especially in the political scene, on people being separate from each other and
people making something of it. I think David Duke is a good example of someone
who is appealing to a special group against other groups. Why is that so
successful?
Woodie White: It is successful because it
feeds the fear that many people have of difference rather than recognizing that
the true value of difference is to make the whole more interesting and to make
the whole greater and stronger and not so much to divide. Our pluralism should
make us a stronger nation, not a weaker nation.
Hardin: I think of it in terms of tribe.
Everybody seems to have a tribe that they identify with. They care more about
those people than others. This is true whether we are talking about the Middle
East or maybe Northern Ireland or certainly our own country with the racial and
all the other differences that people land on. How do we change that? How do we
convince people that there is a better path that is more fun and more
interesting?
White: There is indeed a better path. I
think we are stronger individually as we share in the differences of each other,
each other's culture, each other's opinion. That is to help make us stronger so
that I am greater as an individual because of what I have gained from others who
are different from myself. That is really the true sentiment and hope of our
nation.
Hardin: I think you identified fear as a big
issue and I agree with that. People are afraid of losing their jobs. They have
had, maybe, a favored position. They don't want to lose that favored position.
It is very hard to convince people when it comes to their job or the place where
they live, etc., to get around that. I wonder if the media doesn't sometimes
encourage the problem.
White: I think the tragedy is that people
manipulate and use our fear rather than helping us understand the fear and
overcoming it.
Hardin: We have these special interest
groups who want their groups to get something from everybody else. There seems
to be nobody whose special interest is all the people.
White: That is where we need to be. I can
only be as strong as the weakest among us is strong.
Hardin: You are a black leader in an almost
all white diocese. That has got to be a model for all of us.
White: Once you understand that at the core
of it all we are human beings, that there are so many human qualities that
transcend differences of race, culture, we really meet them as human beings and
recognize that our needs are the same.
Hardin: We need to celebrate that. Thanks
for being with us.
White: Thank you.
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